1 / 22

African Civilizations 1500 BC – 700 AD

African Civilizations 1500 BC – 700 AD. Section 1 – Diverse Societies in Africa. Geography. 2 nd largest continent Central Africa is basically one massive plateau Impossible rivers to the interior. Challenges. Deserts Sahara – north

gita
Télécharger la présentation

African Civilizations 1500 BC – 700 AD

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. African Civilizations1500 BC – 700 AD

  2. Section 1 – Diverse Societies in Africa

  3. Geography • 2ndlargest continent • Central Africa is basically one massive plateau • Impossible riversto the interior

  4. Challenges • Deserts • Sahara – north • Sahel borders it to the south and becomes more desert every year • Kalahari – south • Rainforest – west-central • Uninhabitable because light does not get through the canopy • Savannas – grassy plains; most inhabitable region

  5. Early Nomads • First people lived in the Great Rift Valley(origin of all people) • Early people survived as hunter-gatherers, moving as soon as the land stops providing • Some groups had begun herding(pastoralists)

  6. Transition to Settled Life • Lack of options because of the Saharaled to people moving to the savannas, which supported agriculture • With agriculture, life changed drastically for most • Largerfamilies • New activities (specialization): metal working, pottery, and jewelry • Biggercommunities – required new ways of governing

  7. Things in common • Familywas the most important social unit • Included extended family (clans) • Religion – blended elements of onecreator with spiritsplaying a major role in daily life(animism) • History – writtenlanguage was rare so history is passed on orallythrough the griots(historians)

  8. Iron Age • West Africa skippedthe Copperand BronzeAges, going straight to iron around 500 BC. • The Nokculture seems to be the earliest West African group

  9. Djenne-Djeno • Cities began develop south of the Sahara around 600 BC • Djenne-Djeno is the oldest known city in sub-saharan Africa, with artifacts dating back to 250 BC

  10. Section 2 - Migration

  11. Causes of Migration • Three categories • Environment • Economic • Political • Reasons • Push-Pull Factors • Jordan/Syria = -4% • Qatar = +4%

  12. Effects • Population density = overcrowding • Ideas/technology improved • Quality of life improves • Cultural clashes • Environmental damage • Lowering Employment • Cultural blending– languagesare one of the easiest ways to trace migrations

  13. Bantu Migrations: Origins • Bantu, which literally means “the people,” refers to a cultural group • They used slash-and-burn farming, forcing them to have to move every few years

  14. Bantu Migration: Causes • Best guess: Farming techniques led to population growththat the land could not sustain. People moved to get their own land • No choice but to go southor southeastbecause the Sahara was to the north

  15. Bantu Migrations: Effects • Territorial wars often broke out with hunter-gatherers • Bantu had iron weapons, far superior to the other groups • Passed on their culture to new groups • Farmingtechniques • Ironworking • Social/political organization • Created a languagefamily in sub-saharan Africa

  16. Section 3: The Kingdom of Aksum

  17. Origins of Aksum • Blending of Arabs(Middle East) and Kushites(African) • Kushites had prospered for nearly 1000 years after fleeing Egypt but are eventually replaced by Aksum

  18. Controlling Trade • Location made it a center for traderoutes • Adulisbecame a center of trade for people from Egypt, Arabia, Persia, India, and Rome • Between 325 and 360, Aksum reached it’s peak under Ezana

  19. Aksumite Religion • Diverse culture from the beginning • Especially Adulis • Believed in one god • The kingwas a descendent • Also animists that offered sacrifices • Eventually Christianitywill gather some East African followers

  20. Becoming Christian • Ezana was educated by a Christian captive • When Ezanatakes power, he will convert to Christianity and make it the official religion • There are still millionsof Christians in East Africa

  21. Aksum Innovations • One of only a few African kingdoms that had a writtenlanguage • StoneArchitecture • Minted coins • Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity • Agricultural developments • Terracedfarming • Canals • Damsand cisterns(tanks)

  22. Fall of Aksum • Lasted 800 years, then Islam began • Initially maintained control by protecting Muhammad’s family • Eventually the Muslims destroyed Adulis(710), cutting Aksum off from the Christianworld • Tradeand environmentwere both affected

More Related